Can you provide some sentences where the meaning changes with the use of Which or That to demonstrate that the two definitions are distinct as opposed to synonymous
Can you provide some sentences where the meaning changes with the use of Which or That to demonstrate that the two definitions are distinct as opposed to synonymous
Can you provide some sentences where the meaning changes with the use of Which or That to demonstrate that the two definitions are distinct as opposed to synonymous
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The car I like
Problem solved
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Which is the relative pronounce which informs the sentence.
That is the demonstrative pronoun which defines the object.
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That Judo which is well smart innit.
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I had a classical education thrust upon my unwilling shoulders from a tender age until I was 21.
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Judo's going for the Gide advice note approach to this. Completely accurate and equally as useless to the recipient.
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Archibald needs to give us the rest of the sentence. Currently we have no finite verb, so there is no sentence in the OP to parse.
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Ditto Judo.
Sooner Gide than Guido.
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Judo - Ogoshi!
Bravo.
Can you provide some sentences where the meaning changes with the use of Which or That to demonstrate that the two definitions are distinct as opposed to synonymous
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Judo - Ogoshi!
Bravo.
Can you provide some sentences where the meaning changes with the use of Which or That to demonstrate that the two definitions are distinct as opposed to synonymous
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Judo - Ogoshi!
Bravo.
Can you provide some sentences where the meaning changes with the use of Which or That to demonstrate that the two definitions are distinct as opposed to synonymous
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Calm down
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ha
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ha
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The car, which I like, is red.
That car I like is red.
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sorry the second sentence should be correctly: I like that red car.
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ok hang about,
The car, which I like, is red
The car, that I like, is red
different meanings?
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or are you saying grammatically speaking the second is incorrect
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I consider that the second sentence is colloquial.
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I consider which the second sentence is, colloquial.
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